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William Rosecrans

William Starke Rosecrans (September 6, 1819 – March 11, 1898) was an American inventor, coal-oil company executive, diplomat, politician, and U.S. Army officer. He gained fame for his role as a Union general during the American Civil War. He was the victor at prominent Western Theater battles, but his military career was effectively ended following his disastrous defeat at the Battle of Chickamauga in 1863.

William S. Rosecrans
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from California's 1st district
In office
March 4, 1881 – March 3, 1885
Preceded byHorace Davis
Succeeded byBarclay Henley
U.S. Minister to Mexico
In office
1868–1869
PresidentAndrew Johnson
Preceded byMarcus Otterbourg
Succeeded byThomas H. Nelson
Personal details
Born(1819-09-06)September 6, 1819
Delaware County, Ohio, US
DiedMarch 11, 1898(1898-03-11) (aged 78)
Redondo Beach, California, US
Resting placeArlington National Cemetery
Political partyDemocratic
Alma materUnited States Military Academy Class of 1842
Nickname"Old Rosy"
Military service
AllegianceUnited States of America
Union
Branch/serviceUnited States Army
Union Army
Years of service1842–1854, 1861–1867
Rank Major General
CommandsArmy of the Mississippi
Army of the Cumberland
Department of the Missouri
Battles/warsAmerican Civil War

Rosecrans graduated in 1842 from the United States Military Academy where he served in engineering assignments as well as a professor before leaving the Army to pursue a career in civil engineering. At the start of the Civil War, leading troops from Ohio, he achieved early combat success in western Virginia. In 1862 in the Western Theater, he won the battles of Iuka and Corinth while under the command of Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant. His brusque, outspoken manner and willingness to quarrel openly with superiors caused a professional rivalry with Grant (as well as with Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton) that would adversely affect Rosecrans' career.

Given command of the Army of the Cumberland, he fought against Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg at Stones River, and later outmaneuvered him in the brilliant Tullahoma Campaign, driving the Confederates from Middle Tennessee. His strategic movements then caused Bragg to abandon the critical city of Chattanooga, but Rosecrans' pursuit of Bragg ended during the bloody Battle of Chickamauga, where his unfortunately worded order mistakenly opened a gap in the Union line and Rosecrans and a third of his army were swept from the field. Besieged in Chattanooga, Rosecrans was relieved of command by Grant.

Following his humiliating defeat, Rosecrans was reassigned to command the Department of Missouri, where he opposed Price's Raid. After the war, he served in diplomatic and appointed political positions and in 1880 was elected to Congress, representing California.

Early life and education

William Starke Rosecrans was born on a farm near Little Taylor Run in Kingston Township, Delaware County, Ohio, the second of five sons of Crandall Rosecrans and Jemima Hopkins. (The first child, Chauncey, died in infancy.) Crandall was a veteran of the War of 1812, in which he served as adjutant to General William Henry Harrison, and then subsequently ran a tavern and store as well as a family farm. One of Crandall's heroes, General John Stark, was the inspiration for William's middle name.[1] Rosecrans was descended from the Dutch-Scandinavian nobleman Harmon Henrik Rosenkrantz (1614–1674), who arrived in New Amsterdam in 1651,[2] but the family name changed spelling during the American Revolutionary War.[3] His mother was the widow of Timothy Hopkins, a relative of Stephen Hopkins, the Colonial Governor of Rhode Island and a signer of the Declaration of Independence.[4]

William had little formal education in his early years, relying heavily on reading books. At the age of 13, he left home to work as a store clerk in Utica, and later Mansfield, Ohio. Unable to afford college, Rosecrans decided to try for an appointment to the United States Military Academy. He interviewed with Congressman Alexander Harper, who had been reserving his appointment for his own son, but Harper was so impressed by Rosecrans that he nominated him instead.[5]

Despite his lack of formal education, Rosecrans excelled academically at West Point, particularly in mathematics, but also in French, drawing, and English grammar. It was at the academy that he received his nickname, "Rosy," or more often "Old Rosy." He graduated from West Point in 1842, fifth in his class of 56 cadets, which included notable future generals such as James Longstreet, Abner Doubleday, D.H. Hill, and Earl Van Dorn. He was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant in the prestigious Corps of Engineers, reflecting his high academic achievement. At his graduation, he met Anna Elizabeth (or Eliza) Hegeman (1823–1883) of New York City and immediately fell in love. They were married on August 24, 1843. Their marriage lasted until her death on December 25, 1883. They had eight children.[6]

Career

After graduating from West Point, Rosecrans was assigned to duty at Fort Monroe, Virginia, engineering sea walls. After a year, he requested assignment as a professor at West Point, where he taught engineering and served as post commissary and quartermaster. Although West Point was a strong bastion of Episcopal Protestantism, during this assignment, he converted to Catholicism in 1845. He wrote about this decision to his family, who had raised him in the Methodist faith, which inspired the youngest of his brothers, Sylvester Horton Rosecrans, to convert as well. Sylvester would become the first bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus.[7]

Although most of the officers in his graduating class fought in the Mexican–American War, the War Department retained Rosecrans at West Point. From 1847 through 1853, he served on engineering assignments in Newport, Rhode Island, New Bedford, Massachusetts and (on temporary assignment to the United States Navy) at the Washington Navy Yard. During this period, Rosecrans sought several civilian jobs as an alternative way to support his growing family, now with four children. He applied for a professorship at the Virginia Military Institute in 1851, losing the position to fellow West Pointer Thomas J. Jackson.[8]

While serving in Newport, Rhode Island, he volunteered his services as the engineer for the construction of St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church. The church is best known as the site of the wedding of John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Bouvier in 1953 and was one of the largest churches constructed in the United States at that time. There is a memorial window in Rosecrans' honor in the church.

Rosecrans suffered a period of failing health and resigned from the Army in 1854, moving into civilian fields. He took over a mining business in Western Virginia (today West Virginia) and ran it extremely successfully. He designed and installed one of the first complete lock and dam systems in Western Virginia on the Coal River; today recognized as the Coal River Locks, Dams, and Log Booms Archeological District. In Cincinnati, he and two partners built one of the first oil refineries west of the Allegheny Mountains. He obtained patents for many inventions, including the first kerosene lamp to successfully burn a round wick and a more effective method of manufacturing soap. While Rosecrans was president of the Preston Coal Oil Company, in 1859, he was burned severely when an experimental "safety" oil lamp exploded, setting the refinery on fire. It took him 18 months to recover, and the resulting facial scars gave him the appearance of having a perpetual smirk. As he concluded recovering from those injuries, the Civil War began.[9]

American Civil War

Just days after Fort Sumter surrendered, Rosecrans offered his services to Ohio Governor William Dennison, who assigned him as a volunteer aide-de-camp to Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan, who commanded all Ohio volunteer forces at the beginning of the war. Promoted to the rank of colonel, Rosecrans briefly commanded the 23rd Ohio Infantry regiment, whose members included Rutherford B. Hayes and William McKinley, both future presidents. He was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army, ranking from May 16, 1861.[10]

[Robert E. Lee's Western Virginia campaign], after its plain failure, was virtually abandoned by the Government. Rosecrans was esteemed in the South as one of the best generals the North had in the field. He was declared by military critics, who could not be accused of partiality, to have clearly outgeneraled Lee, who made the entire object of his campaign to "surround the Dutch General."

Edward A. Pollard, Southern History of the War (1865)[11]

His plans and decisions proved extremely effective in the Western Virginia Campaign. His victories at Rich Mountain and Corrick's Ford in July 1861 were among the first Union victories of the war, but his superior, Maj. Gen. McClellan, received the credit. Rosecrans then prevented, by "much maneuvering but little fighting,"[12] Confederate Brig. Gen. John B. Floyd and his superior, Gen. Robert E. Lee, from recapturing the area that became the state of West Virginia. When McClellan was summoned to Washington after the defeat suffered by Federal forces at the First Battle of Bull Run, General-in-Chief Winfield Scott suggested that McClellan turn over the West Virginia command to Rosecrans. McClellan agreed, and Rosecrans assumed command of what was to become the Department of Western Virginia.[13]

 
Rosecrans the Brave sheet music cover

In late 1861, Rosecrans planned for a winter campaign to capture the strategic town of Winchester, Virginia, turning the Confederate flank at Manassas. He traveled to Washington to obtain McClellan's approval. McClellan disapproved, however, telling Rosecrans that putting 20,000 Union men into Winchester would be countered by Confederates moving an equal number into the vicinity. He also transferred 20,000 of Rosecrans's 22,000 men to serve under Brig. Gen. Frederick W. Lander, leaving Rosecrans with insufficient resources to do any campaigning. In March 1862, Rosecrans's department was converted to the Mountain Department, which was given to political general John C. Frémont, leaving Rosecrans without a command. He served briefly in Washington, where his opinions clashed with those of newly appointed Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton on tactics and Union command organization for the Shenandoah Valley campaign against Stonewall Jackson. Stanton became one of Rosecrans's most vocal critics. One of Stanton's assignments for Rosecrans was to act as a guide for Brig. Gen. Louis Blenker's division (Frémont's department) in the valley, and Rosecrans became intimately involved in the political and command confusion in the campaign against Jackson in the Valley.[14]

Western Theater

Rosecrans was transferred in May 1862 to the Western Theater and received the command of two divisions (the Right Wing) of Maj. Gen. John Pope's Army of the Mississippi. He took an active part in the siege of Corinth under Maj. Gen. Henry W. Halleck. He received command of the entire army on June 26, and in July, added the responsibility of commanding the District of Corinth. In these roles, he was the subordinate of Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, who commanded the District of Western Tennessee and the Army of the Tennessee, from whom he received direction in the Iuka-Corinth campaign in September and October 1862.[15]

Iuka

Confederate Maj. Gen. Sterling Price had been ordered by Gen. Braxton Bragg to move his army from Tupelo toward Nashville, Tennessee, in conjunction with Bragg's Kentucky offensive. Price's army settled in Iuka and awaited the arrival of Maj. Gen. Earl Van Dorn's Army of West Tennessee. The two generals intended to unite and attack Grant's lines of communication in western Tennessee, which would prevent Buell's reinforcement if Grant reacted the way they expected, or might allow them to follow Bragg and support his Northern invasion if Grant acted more passively.[16]

Grant did not wait to be attacked, approving a plan proposed by Rosecrans to converge on Price with two columns before Van Dorn could reinforce him. Grant sent Brig. Gen. Edward Ord with three Army of the Tennessee divisions (about 8,000 men) along the Memphis and Charleston Railroad to move upon Iuka from the northwest. Rosecrans's army would march in concert along the Mobile and Ohio Railroad, swinging into Iuka from the southwest, closing the escape route for Price's army. Grant moved with Ord's headquarters and had little tactical control over Rosecrans during the battle.[17]

While Ord advanced toward Iuka on the night of September 18, Rosecrans was late, having farther to march over roads mired in mud; furthermore, one of his divisions took a wrong turn and had to countermarch to the correct road. That night, he notified Grant that he was 20 miles (32 km) away, but planned to start marching again at 4:30 a.m. and should reach Iuka by midafternoon on September 19. Considering this delay, Grant ordered Ord to move within 4 miles (6.4 km) of the town, but to await the sound of fighting between Rosecrans and Price before engaging the Confederates. Rosecrans' army marched early on September 19, but instead of using two roads as originally planned, it took only one of them. Rosecrans was concerned that if he used both roads, the two halves of his divided force could not support each other if the Confederates attacked.[18]

I cannot speak too highly of the energy and skill displayed by General Rosecrans in the attack, and of the endurance of the troops under him. General Ord's command showed untiring zeal, but the direction taken by the enemy prevented them from taking the active part they desired.

—Grant's first report of the battle, September 20, 1862.[19]

If it was the object of the enemy to make their way into Kentucky, they were defeated in that; if to hold their position until Van Dorn could come up on the southwest of Corinth and make a simultaneous attack, they were defeated in that. Our only defeat was in not capturing the enemy army or destroying it as I had hoped to do. It was a part of General Hamilton's command that did the fighting, directed entirely by that cool and deserving officer.

—Grant's second report of the battle, October 22, 1862.[20]

Rosecrans was within 2 miles (3.2 km) of the town on September 19, pushing back Confederate pickets, when his lead element was struck suddenly by a Confederate division. Fighting, which Price later stated he had "never seen surpassed," continued from 4:30 p.m. until after dark. A fresh north wind, blowing from Ord's position in the direction of Iuka, caused an acoustic shadow that prevented the sound of the guns from reaching him, and he and Grant knew nothing of the engagement until after it was over. Ord's troops stood idly while the fighting raged only a few miles away.[21]

During the night, both Rosecrans and Ord deployed their forces in the expectation of a renewal of the engagement at daylight, but the Confederate forces had withdrawn. Price had been planning this move since September 18, and Rosecrans's attack merely delayed his departure. The Confederates used the road that the Union army had not blocked, meeting up with Van Dorn's army five days later. Rosecrans's cavalry and some infantry pursued Price for 15 miles (24 km), but owing to the exhausted condition of his troops, his column was outrun and he gave up the pursuit. Grant had partially accomplished his objective—Price was not able to link up with Bragg in Kentucky, but Rosecrans had not been able to destroy the Confederate army or prevent it from linking up with Van Dorn and threatening the critical railroad junction at Corinth.[22]

The Battle of Iuka marked the beginning of a long professional enmity between Rosecrans and Grant. The Northern press gave accounts very favorable to Rosecrans at Grant's expense. Some rumors circulated that the reason Ord's column had not attacked in conjunction with Rosecrans was not that the battle had been inaudible, but that Grant had been drunk and incompetent. Grant's first report of the battle was highly complimentary to Rosecrans, but his second, written after Rosecrans had published his own report, took a markedly negative turn. His third statement was in his Personal Memoirs, where he wrote "I was disappointed at the result of the battle of Iuka—but I had so high an opinion of General Rosecrans that I found no fault at the time."[23]

Corinth

Price's army joined Van Dorn's on September 28. Van Dorn, as the senior officer, took command of the combined force. Grant became certain that Corinth was their next target. The Confederates hoped to seize Corinth from an unexpected direction, isolating Rosecrans from reinforcements, and then sweep into Middle Tennessee. Grant sent word to Rosecrans to be prepared for an attack, but despite the warning, Rosecrans was not convinced that Corinth was necessarily the target of Van Dorn's advance. He believed that the Confederate commander would not be foolhardy enough to attack the fortified town and might well instead choose to strike the Mobile and Ohio Railroad and maneuver the Federals out of their position.[24]

On the morning of October 3, three of Rosecrans's divisions advanced into old Confederate rifle pits north and northwest of town. Van Dorn began his assault at 10 a.m. as a planned double envelopment, in which he would open the fight on Rosecrans's left, in the hope that Rosecrans would weaken his right to reinforce his left, at which time Price would make the main assault against the Federal right and enter the works. The Confederates forced their way through a temporary gap in the line about 1:30 p.m., and the whole Union line fell back to within half a mile of the redoubts.[25]

So far the advantage had been with the Confederates. Rosecrans had been driven back at all points, and night found his entire army, except pickets, inside the redoubts. Both sides had been exhausted by the fighting. The weather had been hot, with a high of 94 °F (34 °C), and water was scarce, causing many men to nearly faint from their exertions. Rosecrans's biographer, William M. Lamers, reported that Rosecrans was confident at the end of the first day of battle, saying, "We've got them where we want them", and that some of the general's associates claimed that he was in "magnificent humor." Peter Cozzens, however, suggested that Rosecrans was "tired and bewildered, certain only he was badly outnumbered—at least three to one by his reckoning."[26] Civil War historian Steven E. Woodworth portrayed Rosecrans's conduct in a negative light:

Rosecrans ... had not done well. He had failed to anticipate the enemy's action, put little more than half his troops into the battle, and called on his men to fight on ground they could not possibly hold. He had sent a series of confusing and unrealistic orders to his division commanders and had done nothing to coordinate their activities, while he personally remained safely back in Corinth. The movements of the army that day had had nothing to do with any plan of his to develop the enemy or make a fighting withdrawal. The troops and their officers had simply held on as best as they could.[27]

On the second day of battle, the Confederates moved forward at 9 a.m. to meet heavy Union artillery fire, storming Battery Powell and Battery Robinett, where desperate hand-to-hand fighting occurred. A brief incursion into the town of Corinth was repulsed. After a Federal counterattack recaptured Battery Powell, Van Dorn ordered a general retreat. At 4 p.m., reinforcements from Grant under the command of Brig. Gen. James B. McPherson arrived from Jackson. But the Battle of Corinth had effectively been over since 1 p.m. and the Confederates were in full retreat.[28]

It lives in the memory of every soldier who fought that day how his General plunged into the thickest of the conflict, fought like a private soldier, dealt sturdy blows with the flat of his sword on the runaways, and fairly drove them to stand. Then came a quick rally which his magnificent bearing inspired, a storm of grape from the batteries tore its way through the Rebel ranks, reinforcements which Rosecrans sent flying gave impetus to the National advance, and the charging column was speedily swept back outside the entrenchments.

Whitelaw Reid, Ohio in the War[29]

Once again, Rosecrans's performance during the second day of the battle has been the subject of dispute among historians. His biographer, Lamers, paints a romantic picture:

One of Davies' men, David Henderson, watched Rosecrans as he dashed in front of the Union lines. Bullets carried his hat away. His hair flew in the wind. As he rode along he shouted: "Soldiers! Stand by your country." "He was the only general I ever knew," Henderson said later, "who was closer to the enemy than we were who fought at the front." Henderson (after the war, a Congressman from Ohio and Speaker of the House of Representatives) wrote that Rosecrans was the "Central leading and victorious spirit. ... By his splendid example in the thickest of the fight he succeeded in restoring the line before it was completely demoralized; and the men, brave when bravely led, fought again."[30]

Peter Cozzens, author of a recent book-length study of Iuka and Corinth, came to the opposite conclusion:

Rosecrans was in the thick of battle, but his presence was hardly inspiring. The Ohioan had lost all control of his infamous temper, and he cursed as cowards everyone who pushed past him until he, too lost hope. ... Rosecrans's histrionics nearly cost him his life. "On the second day I was everywhere on the line of battle," he wrote with disingenuous pride. "Temple Clark of my staff was shot through the breast. My saber-tache strap was caught by a bullet, and my gloves were stained with the blood of a staff officer wounded at my side. An alarm spread that I was killed, but it was soon stopped by my appearance on the field."[31]

Rosecrans's performance immediately after the battle was lackluster. Grant had given him specific orders to pursue Van Dorn without delay, but he did not begin his march until the morning of October 5, explaining that his troops needed rest and the thicketed country made progress difficult by day and impossible by night. At 1 p.m. on October 4, when pursuit would have been most effective, Rosecrans rode along his line to deny in person a rumor that he had been slain. At Battery Robinett, he dismounted, bared his head, and told his soldiers, "I stand in the presence of brave men, and I take my hat off to you."[32]

Army of the Cumberland

 
Rosecrans's principal opponent, Gen. Braxton Bragg

Rosecrans once again found that he was a hero in the Northern press. On October 24, he was given command of XIV Corps (which, because he was also given command of the Department of the Cumberland, would soon be renamed the Army of the Cumberland), replacing the ineffectual Maj. Gen. Don Carlos Buell, who had just fought the inconclusive Battle of Perryville, Kentucky, against Gen. Braxton Bragg, but was accused of moving too cautiously. Rosecrans was promoted to the rank of major general (of volunteers, as opposed to his brigadier rank in the regular army). The promotion was applied retroactive to March 21, 1862, so that he would outrank fellow Maj. Gen. Thomas; Thomas had earlier been offered Buell's command, but turned down the opportunity out of a sense of personal loyalty. Grant was not unhappy that Rosecrans was leaving his command.[33]

In his role as an army commander, Rosecrans became one of the most popular generals in the Union Army. He was known to his men as "Old Rosy", not only because of his last name (the source for that nickname at West Point), but because of his large red nose, which was described as "intensified Roman". As a devout Catholic, he carried a crucifix on his watch chain and a rosary in his pocket, and he delighted in keeping his staff up half the night debating religious doctrine. He could swing swiftly from bristling anger to good-natured amusement, which endeared him to his men.[34]

Stones River

 
A romantic image of Rosecrans at Murfreesboro, January 2, 1863

Rosecrans's predecessor, Buell, had been relieved because of his desultory pursuit of Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg following the Battle of Perryville. And yet, Rosecrans displayed similar caution, remaining in Nashville while he reprovisioned his army and improved the training of his cavalry forces. By early December 1862, General-in-Chief Henry W. Halleck had lost his patience. He wrote to Rosecrans, "If you remain one more week in Nashville, I cannot prevent your removal." Rosecrans replied, "I need no other stimulus to make me do my duty than the knowledge of what it is. To threats of removal or the like I must be permitted to say that I am insensible."[35]

In late December, Rosecrans began his march against Bragg's Army of Tennessee, encamped outside Murfreesboro, Tennessee. The Battle of Stones River was the bloodiest battle of the war in terms of percentages of casualties. Both Rosecrans and Bragg planned to attack the other's right flank, but Bragg moved first, early in the morning of December 31, driving the Union army back into a small defensive perimeter. As he realized the severity of the surprise attack, Rosecrans demonstrated the nervous hyperactivity for which he was known in battle. He personally rallied his men along the line, and gave direct orders to any brigades, regiments or companies he encountered. Disregarding his own safety, he rode back and forth at the very front of his line and sometimes between his men and the enemy.[36] As Rosecrans raced across the battlefield directing units, seeming ubiquitous to his men, his uniform was covered with blood from his friend and chief of staff, Col. Julius Garesché, beheaded by a cannonball while riding alongside.[37]

When disaster had enveloped half the army, and from that time to the end, Rosecrans was magnificent. Rising superior to the disaster that in a single moment had annihilated his carefully prepared plans, he grasped in his single hands the fortunes of the day. He stemmed the tide of retreat, hurried brigades and divisions to the point of danger, massed artillery, infused into them his own dauntless spirit, and out of defeat itself, fashioned the weapons of victory. As at Rich Mountain, Iuka and Corinth, it was his personal presence that magnetized his plans into success.

— Whitelaw Reid, Ohio in the War, Volume I[38]

The armies paused on January 1, but the following day, Bragg attacked again, this time against a strong position on Rosecrans's left flank. The Union defense was formidable, and the attack was repulsed with heavy losses. Bragg withdrew his army to Tullahoma, effectively ceding control of Middle Tennessee to the Union. The battle was important to Union morale following its defeat at the Battle of Fredericksburg a few weeks earlier, and President Abraham Lincoln wrote to Rosecrans. "You gave us a hard-earned victory, which had there been a defeat instead, the nation could scarcely have lived over."[39]

Tullahoma

 
Tullahoma Campaign
  Confederate
  Union

Rosecrans's XIV Corps was soon redesignated the Army of the Cumberland, which he kept in place occupying Murfreesboro for almost six months, spending the time resupplying and training, for he was reluctant to advance on the muddy winter roads. He received numerous entreaties from President Lincoln, Secretary of War Stanton, and General-in-Chief Halleck to resume campaigning against Bragg, but rebuffed them through the winter and spring. A primary concern of the government was that if Rosecrans continued to sit idly, the Confederates might move units from Bragg's army in an attempt to relieve the pressure that Union Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant was applying to Vicksburg, Mississippi. Lincoln wrote to Rosecrans, "I would not push you to any rashness, but I am very anxious that you do your utmost, short of rashness, to keep Bragg from getting lost to help Johnston against Grant."[40] Rosecrans offered an excuse that if he started to move against Bragg, Bragg would likely relocate his entire army to Mississippi and threaten Grant's Vicksburg Campaign even more; thus, by not attacking Bragg, he was helping Grant.[41] Frustration with Rosecrans's excuses led Halleck to threaten to relieve him if he did not move, but in the end he merely protested "against the expense to which [Rosecrans] put the government for telegrams."[42]

On June 2, Halleck telegraphed that if Rosecrans was unwilling to move, some of his troops would be sent to Mississippi to reinforce Grant. Rosecrans sent a questionnaire to his corps and division commanders in the hopes of documenting support for his position—that Bragg had so far detached no significant forces to Mississippi, that advancing the Army of the Cumberland would do nothing to prevent any such transfer, and that any immediate advance was not a good idea. Fifteen of the seventeen senior generals supported most of Rosecrans's positions and the counsel against advancing was unanimous. The only dissenter was the newly assigned chief of staff, Brig. Gen. James A. Garfield, who recommended an immediate advance, but historian Steven E. Woodworth opines that he may have been "most concerned with the [political] impression his statement would make in Washington."[43] On June 16, Halleck wired a blunt message: "Is it your intention to make an immediate movement forward? A definite answer, yes or no, is required." Rosecrans responded to this ultimatum: "If immediate means tonight or tomorrow, no. If it means as soon as all things are ready, say five days, yes." Seven days later, early in the morning of June 24, Rosecrans reported that the Army of the Cumberland had begun to move against Bragg.[44]

The Tullahoma Campaign (June 24 – July 3, 1863) was characterized by flawless maneuvers and very low casualties, as Rosecrans forced Bragg to retreat back to Chattanooga. Tullahoma is considered a "brilliant" campaign by many historians.[45] Abraham Lincoln wrote, "The flanking of Bragg at Shelbyville, Tullahoma and Chattanooga is the most splendid piece of strategy I know of." Union Cavalry Corps commander David S. Stanley wrote, "If any student of the military art desires to make a study of a model campaign, let him take his maps and General Rosecrans's orders for the daily movements of his campaign. No better example of successful strategy was carried out during the war than in the Tullahoma campaign."[46]

When Rosecrans' troops entered Shelbyville, they were able to rescue captured Union spy Pauline Cushman. Cushman had been scouting the movements of Gen. Bragg when she was captured (Gen. John Hunt Morgan was one of her escorts to Gen. Bragg for questioning). A military trial found her guilty; she was to be hanged as a spy. Her rescue came just three days prior to her scheduled execution. Rosecrans and Cushman went on to raise over one million dollars for soldiers aid at the 1863 Cincinnati, Ohio Sanitary Fair.[citation needed] In contrast, Rosecrans had approved the courtmartial and hanging of two Confederate Officers, Lawrence Orton Williams and Walter Peters, on June 9, 1863, at Franklin Tenn after these two officers had disguised themselves as Union Officers for the purposes of spying.[47][48]

Rosecrans did not receive all of the public acclaim his campaign might have under different circumstances. The day it ended was the day Gen. Robert E. Lee launched the ill-fated Pickett's Charge and lost the Battle of Gettysburg. The following day, Vicksburg surrendered to Grant. Secretary Stanton telegraphed Rosecrans, "Lee's Army overthrown; Grant victorious. You and your noble army now have a chance to give the finishing blow to the rebellion. Will you neglect the chance?" Rosecrans was infuriated by this attitude and responded, "Just received your cheering telegram announcing the fall of Vicksburg and confirming the defeat of Lee. You do not appear to observe the fact that this noble army has driven the rebels from middle Tennessee. ... I beg in behalf of this army that the War Department may not overlook so great an event because it is not written in letters of blood."[49]

Chickamauga

Rosecrans did not immediately pursue Bragg and "give the finishing blow to the rebellion" as Stanton had urged. He paused to regroup and study the logistically difficult choices of pursuit into the mountainous regions to the west and south of Chattanooga. When he was ready to move, he once again maneuvered in a way to disadvantage Bragg. The Confederates abandoned Chattanooga and withdrew into the mountains of northwestern Georgia. Rosecrans threw aside his previous caution under the assumption that Bragg would continue to retreat and began to pursue with his army over three routes that left his corps commanders dangerously far apart. At the Battle of Davis's Cross Roads on September 11, Bragg came close to ambushing and destroying one of Rosecrans's isolated corps. Realizing the threat at last, Rosecrans issued urgent orders to concentrate his army, and the two opponents faced each other across West Chickamauga Creek.

 
Brig. Gen. Thomas J. Wood

The Battle of Chickamauga began on September 19 with Bragg attacking the not fully concentrated Union army, but he was unable to break through Rosecrans's defensive positions. On the second day of battle, however, disaster befell Rosecrans in the form of his poorly worded order in response to a poorly understood situation. The order was directed to Brig. Gen. Thomas J. Wood, "to close up and support [General Joseph J.] Reynolds's [division]," planning to fill an assumed gap in the line. However, Wood's subsequent movement actually opened up a new, division-sized gap in the line. By coincidence, Lt. Gen. James Longstreet had planned to lead a massive assault in that very area and the Confederates exploited the gap to full effect, shattering Rosecrans's right flank.

The majority of units on the Union right fell back in disorder toward Chattanooga. Rosecrans, Garfield, and two of the corps commanders, although attempting to rally retreating units, soon joined them in the rush to safety. Rosecrans decided to proceed in haste to Chattanooga in order to organize his returning men and the city defenses. He sent Garfield to Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas with orders to take command of the forces remaining at Chickamauga and withdraw.[50]

The Union army managed to escape complete disaster because of the stout defense organized by Thomas on Horseshoe Ridge, heroism that earned him the nickname "Rock of Chickamauga." The army withdrew that night to fortified positions in Chattanooga. Bragg had not succeeded in his objective to destroy the Army of the Cumberland, but the Battle of Chickamauga was nonetheless the worst Union defeat in the Western Theater. Thomas urged Rosecrans to rejoin the army and lead it, but Rosecrans, physically exhausted and psychologically a beaten man, remained in Chattanooga. President Lincoln attempted to prop up the morale of his general, telegraphing "Be of good cheer. ... We have unabated confidence in you and your soldiers and officers. In the main, you must be the judge as to what is to be done. If I was to suggest, I would say save your army by taking strong positions until Burnside joins you." Privately, Lincoln told John Hay that Rosecrans seemed "confused and stunned like a duck hit on the head."[51]

Whether he did or did not know that Thomas still held the field, it was a catastrophe that Rosecrans did not himself ride to Thomas, and send Garfield to Chattanooga. Had he gone to the front in person and shown himself to his men, as at Stone River, he might by his personal presence have plucked victory from disaster, although it is doubtful whether he could have done more than Thomas did. Rosecrans, however, rode to Chattanooga instead.

— The Edge of Glory, Rosecrans biographer William M. Lamers[52]

Although Rosecrans's men were protected by strong defensive positions, the supply lines into Chattanooga were tenuous and subject to Confederate cavalry raids. Bragg's army occupied the heights surrounding the city and laid siege upon the Union forces. Rosecrans, demoralized by his defeat, proved unable to break the siege without reinforcements. Only hours after the defeat at Chickamauga, Secretary Stanton ordered Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker to travel to Chattanooga with 15,000 men in two corps from the Army of the Potomac in Virginia. Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant was ordered to send 20,000 men under his chief subordinate Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman, from Vicksburg, Mississippi. On September 29, Stanton ordered Grant to go to Chattanooga himself,[53] as commander of the newly created Military Division of the Mississippi. Grant was given the option of replacing the demoralized Rosecrans with Thomas. Although Grant did not have good personal relations with either general, he selected Thomas to command the Army of the Cumberland. Grant traveled over the treacherous mountain supply line roads and arrived in Chattanooga on October 23.

On the morning of the 21st we took the train for the front, reaching Stevenson Alabama, after dark. Rosecrans was there on his way north. He came into my car and we held a brief interview, in which he described very clearly the situation at Chattanooga, and made some excellent suggestions as to what should be done. My only wonder was that he had not carried them out.

— Ulysses S. Grant, Memoirs[54]

Grant executed a plan originally devised by Rosecrans and Brig. Gen. William F. "Baldy" Smith to open the "Cracker Line" and resupply the army and, in a series of battles for Chattanooga (November 23–25, 1863), routed Bragg's army and sent it retreating into Georgia.[55]

Missouri and resignation

Rosecrans was sent to Cincinnati to await further orders, but ultimately he would play no further large part in the fighting. He was given command of the Department of Missouri from January to December 1864, when he was active in opposing Sterling Price's Missouri raid. During the 1864 Republican National Convention, his former chief of staff, James Garfield, head of the Ohio delegation, telegraphed Rosecrans to ask if he would consider running to be Abraham Lincoln's vice president. The Republicans that year were seeking a War Democrat to run with Lincoln under the temporary name of "National Union Party." Rosecrans replied in a cryptically positive manner, but Garfield never received the return telegram. Friends of Rosecrans speculated that Edwin M. Stanton, Secretary of War, intercepted and suppressed it.[56]

Rosecrans was mustered out of the U.S. volunteer service on January 15, 1866. On June 30, 1866, President Andrew Johnson nominated Rosecrans for appointment as a brevet major general in the regular army, to rank from March 13, 1865, in gratitude for his actions at Stones River, and the U.S. Senate confirmed the appointment on July 25, 1866. Rosecrans resigned from the regular army on March 28, 1867. On February 27, 1889, by act of Congress he was re-appointed a brigadier general in the regular army and was placed on the retired list on March 1, 1889.[57]

After the war, Rosecrans became a companion of the District of Columbia Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States - a military society of officers who had served in the Union armed forces and their descendants.

Later life

 
Rosecrans in later life

After the war, Rosecrans became interested in railroads and was one of the eleven incorporators of the Southern Pacific Railroad, but his valuable interests in the stock of the railroad were lost to some of the unscrupulous financiers who were his business partners. From 1868 to 1869, Rosecrans served as U.S. Minister to Mexico, but was replaced after just five months when his old nemesis, Ulysses Grant, became president. During this brief service, he became convinced that Mexico would benefit from a narrow-gauge railway and telegraph line from Tampico to the coast, but this venture, from 1869 through 1873, was a failure.[58]

Rosecrans then became interested in civil administration and wrote a book, Popular Government, with a former newspaperman, Josiah Riley, which advocated registration and voting reforms. He was approached by various political parties to run for high office: Governor of Ohio (Union party, 1866); governor of California (Democratic Party, 1868); governor of Ohio (Democratic Party, 1869); U.S Representative from Nevada (Democratic Party, 1876). He refused all of these offers because they conflicted with potentially promising business ventures, leading him to be referred to by the nickname "The Great Decliner."[59]

In 1869, Rosecrans bought 16,000 acres (65 km2) of Rancho San Pedro in the Los Angeles basin for $2.50 per acre ($620/km2), a low price possibly because the land was deemed worthless for lack of a spring for water. The ranch, dubbed "Rosecrans Rancho", was bordered by what later was Florence Avenue on the north, Redondo Beach Boulevard on the south, Central Avenue on the east, and Arlington Avenue on the west. By the time of Rosecrans's death, his son Carl was living on the estate, but most of the land had been sold parcel by parcel to support the financial needs of mining ventures in which Rosecrans invested.[60]

In 1880, Rosecrans was elected U.S. Representative as a Democrat from California's 1st congressional district. That same year, James Garfield was elected President as a Republican. Rosecrans was distressed to see that Garfield's campaign literature played up his role in the war at Rosecrans's expense. Their former friendship was irretrievably broken. After Garfield's assassination, Charles A. Dana capitalized on the tragedy by publishing the letters written by Garfield after Chickamauga to then-Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase; the letters may have been the major reason for Rosecrans's loss of political support at the time.[61]

Rosecrans was reelected in 1882 and became the chairman of the House Military Affairs Committee, a position in which he publicly opposed a bill that would provide a pension to former President Grant and his wife. Unaware of the serious financial condition of Grant's family, Rosecrans objected that some of Grant's official statements "were false, and which he knew to be false at the time he made them, and which I have shown in my official reports to be false. I cannot say to the people of this country that a business which has been conducted as to rob poor people of millions, and which, if done on a smaller scale would have sent its managers to prison, shall be considered as important when the principal manager has allowed a great name to be used as the instrument of the robbery." The bill was passed over his objections. When a bill was introduced in 1889 to restore Rosecrans's rank and place him on the retired list, some representatives objected, based on Rosecrans's actions against Grant in 1885, but the bill was passed.[62]

Rosecrans did not seek re-election in 1884. He served as a Regent of the University of California in 1884 and 1885.[63]

Although Rosecrans was mentioned on a few occasions as a possible presidential candidate, the first Democratic president elected after the war was Grover Cleveland in 1884. Newspaper stories circulated that Rosecrans was under serious consideration to be appointed his Secretary of War, but he was appointed instead as the Register of the Treasury, serving from 1885 to 1893.[64]

Rosecrans spoke at a grand reunion of veterans (north and south) at the Chickamauga battlefield on September 19, 1889, delivering a moving address praising national reconciliation.[65] The gathering led to Congress establishing the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park the following year, the nation's first national battlefield park.[66]

In 1896, he was awarded the Laetare Medal, the oldest and most prestigious award for American Catholics, by the University of Notre Dame.[67]

Death

In February 1898, Rosecrans suffered from a cold that turned into pneumonia, but appeared to recover successfully. Then he learned that one of his favorite grandchildren (Rosecrans Toole, the son of Lily and Joseph Kemp Toole, the first Governor of Montana) had died of diphtheria. He was seized with grief and his health failed precipitously. He died on March 11, 1898, at Rancho Sausal Redondo, Redondo Beach, California.[68] His casket lay in state in Los Angeles City Hall, covered by the headquarters flag that flew over Stones River and Chickamauga. In 1908 his remains were interred in Arlington National Cemetery.[69]

Legacy

Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery, in San Diego, California, is named in his honor. Major streets named after William Rosecrans include Rosecrans Avenue, a major east–west street that runs through the southern part of Los Angeles County, and Rosecrans Street in San Diego, which runs near the aforementioned cemetery. A school (General Rosecrans Elementary, on Rosecrans and Acacia Avenues) bears his name in the city of Compton, a Los Angeles suburb. Another elementary school, General Rosecrans Elementary in Sunbury, Ohio is also named after him. A simple memorial was constructed on the site of his birthplace and childhood home. Just north of Sunbury, Ohio, a large boulder surrounded by a wrought iron fence holds a plaque in memoriam and rests beside a rural road that bears his name. An equestrian statue, resting on a 55,000 pound black granite boulder, now has a place on the city of Sunbury square.[70] Rosecrans' Headquarters in the buildup to the Chickamauga Campaign was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.[71]

He was the first colonel of the regiment to which I belonged, my boyhood ideal of a great soldier, and I gladly pay him tribute.

—President William McKinley, 1895 remarks at the dedication of the Ohio Monument at Chickamauga.[72]

The SS Rosecrans was a troop transport ship used in the early 20th century that saw service in the Pacific.[73][74][75][76] The U.S.A.T. William S. Rosecrans, another similarly named ship, was built as Liberty Ship hull 570 by the Oregon Shipbuilding Corporation and rated to hold 504 troops.[77]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Lamers, p. 9.
  2. ^ The Rosenkrans family in Europe and America. Comp. by Allen Rosenkrans - Published 1900 by New Jersey Herald Press in Newton, N.J. [1]
  3. ^ Gordon, p. 110; Lamers, pp. 8–9, 11.
  4. ^ Lamers, p. 9. A biography at the Civil War Home website claims that Rosecrans was the great-grandson of Stephen Hopkins.
  5. ^ Lamers, pp. 11–12.
  6. ^ Lamers, pp. 11–14; Eicher, Civil War High Commands, p. 461. The number of children is disputed. Lamers, pp. 442, 446–47, refers to five by name: Louis, a Catholic priest, Lily, Carl, Anita, and Mary—Sister St. Charles of the Brown County Ursalines. A Rosenkrantz family website and the Department of the Ohio memorial website give eight names: William (died in infancy), Adrian Louis, Mary Louise, Lily R., Anna D., Carl Frederick, and Charlotte.
  7. ^ Lamers, p. 15; Meehan, The Catholic Encyclopedia.
  8. ^ Lamers, pp. 15–17; Gordon, p. 111; Warner, p. 410.
  9. ^ Lamers, pp. 17–19; Gordon, p. 111; Eicher, Civil War High Commands, p. 461.
  10. ^ Lamers, pp. 20–26; Gordon, pp. 111–12; Eicher, Civil War High Commands, p. 461.
  11. ^ Lamers, pp. 61–62.
  12. ^ McPherson, p. 303.
  13. ^ Lamers, pp. 27–39; Gordon, pp. 113–14; Eicher, Civil War High Commands, p. 461.
  14. ^ Lamers, pp. 64–82; Cozzens, Shenandoah 1862, pp. 51–52, 229, 238.
  15. ^ Lamers, pp. 70–82; Gordon, pp. 114–15; Warner, p. 410; Eicher, Civil War High Commands, p. 461.
  16. ^ Hattaway and Jones, p. 250; Eicher, Longest Night, pp. 371–72; Woodworth, pp. 218–19; Lamers, p. 103.
  17. ^ Welcher, pp. 620–21; Woodworth, pp. 219–22; Lamers, p. 103.
  18. ^ Welcher, pp. 620–21; Woodworth, pp. 219–22; Lamers, pp. 103–06.
  19. ^ Lamers, p. 122.
  20. ^ Lamers, p. 123.
  21. ^ Woodworth, pp. 221–23; Eicher, Longest Night, pp. 372–74; Welcher, pp. 622–23.
  22. ^ Hattaway and Jones, p. 253; Welcher, p. 623; Lamers, pp. 115–16.
  23. ^ Lamers, pp. 120–30.
  24. ^ Lamers, pp. 133–35
  25. ^ Woodworth, pp. 226–28; Cozzens, Darkest Days, pp. 160–74; Eicher, Longest Night, pp. 375–77; Korn, p. 40; Kennedy, p. 131.
  26. ^ Lamers, pp. 141–42; Cozzens, Darkest Days, p. 224.
  27. ^ Woodworth, p. 229.
  28. ^ Lamers, pp. 148–52; Cozzens, Darkest Days, pp. 235–76; Welcher, p. 557.
  29. ^ Reid, vol. I, p. 325.
  30. ^ Lamers, p. 149.
  31. ^ Cozzens, Darkest Days, pp. 251–52.
  32. ^ Foote, p. 725.
  33. ^ Lamers, pp. 171–82; Gordon, pp. 119–22.
  34. ^ Foote, p. 80.
  35. ^ Cozzens, No Better Place to Die, p. 26; Lamers, pp. 195–96.
  36. ^ Cozzens, No Better Place to Die, p. 129; Lamers, pp. 202–34.
  37. ^ Cozzens, No Better Place to Die, p. 166.
  38. ^ Reid, p. 334.
  39. ^ Cozzens, No Better Place to Die, p. 207; Lamers, pp. 234–43.
  40. ^ Woodworth, p. 17.
  41. ^ Woodworth, p. 6.
  42. ^ Esposito, text for map 108.
  43. ^ Woodworth, p. 17; Lamers, pp. 269–71.
  44. ^ Woodworth, p. 18.
  45. ^ For example: Lamers, p. 290; Woodworth, p. 42; Korn, p. 30, "a model of planning and execution".
  46. ^ Lamers, p. 290.
  47. ^ "ExecutedToday.com » 1863: Lawrence Williams and Walter Peters, bold CSA spies". Retrieved July 17, 2020.
  48. ^ "The Execution of Williams and Peters". Exit78. June 2, 2013. Retrieved July 17, 2020.
  49. ^ Lamers, p. 291; Korn, p. 30
  50. ^ Woodworth, p. 134; Cozzens, This Terrible Sound, pp. 402–05; Robertson 2008, pp. 42–43. Robertson stated that Rosecrans, witnessing the destruction of Lytle's brigade, turned toward the rear "in apparent despair," the army commander's "spirit broken."
  51. ^ Cozzens, This Terrible Sound, pp. 520–21; Esposito, map 114; Woodworth, pp. 129–31; Lamers, p. 361.
  52. ^ Lamers, p. 355.
  53. ^ Cozzens, Shipwreck, pp. 2–3.
  54. ^ Grant, vol. 2, p. 28.
  55. ^ Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 151; Lamers, pp. 393–400; Cozzens, Shipwreck, pp. 18, 2–6; Esposito, map 115.
  56. ^ Lamers, p. 424.
  57. ^ The Union Army, vol. 8, pp. 216–17; Eicher, Civil War High Commands, pp. 462, 708; Lamers, p. 447.
  58. ^ Lamers, pp. 440–41.
  59. ^ Lamers, pp. 441–42.
  60. ^ Frequently Asked Questions about Gardena, County of Los Angeles Public Library website; Lamers, p. 448.
  61. ^ Lamers, pp. 408, 446.
  62. ^ Lamers, pp. 447–48.
  63. ^ ROSECRANS, William Starke Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress
  64. ^ Lamers, p. 446.
  65. ^ Robertson 1995, pp. 28–29. https://www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/our-first-national-military-park
  66. ^ "Chickamauga and Chattanooga NMP: An Administrative History (Chapter I)".
  67. ^ "Recipients | The Laetare Medal". University of Notre Dame. Retrieved August 2, 2020.
  68. ^ "Rosecrans is Dead". Chicago Tribune. March 12, 1898. p. 13. Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  69. ^ Lamers, p. 449; Eicher, Civil War High Commands, p. 462
  70. ^ Lepola, Lenny C., "Paul Seeks Memorial Site for General Rosecrans", Sunbury News, April 23, 2009.
  71. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010. Retrieved August 17, 2014.
  72. ^ Lamers, p. 449.
  73. ^ Mowbray Tate, E. (1986). Transpacific Steam: The Story of Steam Navigation from the Pacific Coast of North America to the Far East and the Antipodes, 1867-1941. ISBN 9780845347928.
  74. ^ Rogers, Robert F. (1995). Destiny's Landfall: A History of Guam. ISBN 9780824816780.
  75. ^ "U.S.A.T. ROSECRANS transporting U.S. Troops out of Seattle en route to China, 1900".
  76. ^ Silverstone, Paul (May 13, 2013). The New Navy, 1883-1922. ISBN 978-1135865436.
  77. ^ "Liberty Ships built by Oregon Shipbuilding Corporation and by Kaiser Vancouver during World War II Vancouver, Washington for U. S. Maritime Commission". www.usmm.org. Retrieved July 17, 2020.

References

  • Cozzens, Peter. No Better Place to Die: The Battle of Stones River. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1990. ISBN 0-252-01652-1.
  • Cozzens, Peter. Shenandoah 1862: Stonewall Jackson's Valley Campaign. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0-8078-3200-4.
  • Cozzens, Peter. The Darkest Days of the War: The Battles of Iuka and Corinth. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8078-2320-1.
  • Cozzens, Peter. The Shipwreck of Their Hopes: The Battles for Chattanooga. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1994. ISBN 0-252-01922-9.
  • Cozzens, Peter. This Terrible Sound: The Battle of Chickamauga. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1992. ISBN 0-252-02236-X.
  • Eicher, David J. The Longest Night: A Military History of the Civil War. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2001. ISBN 0-684-84944-5.
  • Eicher, John H., and David J. Eicher. Civil War High Commands. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
  • Esposito, Vincent J. West Point Atlas of American Wars. New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1959. OCLC 5890637. The collection of maps (without explanatory text) is available online at the West Point website.
  • Foote, Shelby. The Civil War: A Narrative. Vol. 2, Fredericksburg to Meridian. New York: Random House, 1958. ISBN 0-394-49517-9.
  • Gordon, Leslie J. "The Failed Relationship of William S. Rosecrans and Grant." In Grant's Lieutenants: From Cairo to Vicksburg, edited by Steven E. Woodworth. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2001. ISBN 0-7006-1127-4.
  • Grant, Ulysses S. Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant. 2 vols. Charles L. Webster & Company, 1885–86. ISBN 0-914427-67-9.
  • Hattaway, Herman, and Archer Jones. How the North Won: A Military History of the Civil War. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1983. ISBN 0-252-00918-5.
  • Korn, Jerry, and the Editors of Time-Life Books. The Fight for Chattanooga: Chickamauga to Missionary Ridge. Alexandria, VA: Time-Life Books, 1985. ISBN 0-8094-4816-5.
  • Lamers, William M. The Edge of Glory: A Biography of General William S. Rosecrans, U.S.A. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1961. ISBN 0-8071-2396-X.
  • McPherson, James M. Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era. Oxford History of the United States. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988. ISBN 0-19-503863-0.
  • Meehan, Thomas. "William and Sylvester Rosecrans." In The Catholic Encyclopedia, vol. 13. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1912.
  • Reid, Whitelaw. Ohio in the War: Her Statesmen, Her Generals, and Soldiers. Vol. 1, The History of the State during the War, and the Lives of Her Generals, Cincinnati, OH: Moore, Wilstach, and Baldwin, 1868. OCLC 444862.
  • Robertson, William Glenn. The Battle of Chickamauga. Conshohocken, PA: Eastern National Press, 1995. ISBN 978-0-915992-77-5.
  • Robertson, William Glenn. "The Chickamauga Campaign: The Battle of Chickamauga, Day 2." Blue & Gray Magazine, Summer 2008.
  • Warner, Ezra J. Generals in Blue: Lives of the Union Commanders. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1964. ISBN 0-8071-0822-7.
  • *Woodworth, Steven E. Six Armies in Tennessee: The Chickamauga and Chattanooga Campaigns. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1998. ISBN 0-8032-9813-7.
  • The Union Army; A History of Military Affairs in the Loyal States, 1861–65 — Records of the Regiments in the Union Army — Cyclopedia of Battles — Memoirs of Commanders and Soldiers. Vol. 8. Wilmington, NC: Broadfoot Publishing, 1997. First published 1908 by Federal Publishing Company.
  • Los Angeles County Public Library – "Who was William Starke Rosecrans and how was he involved in Gardena's founding?"
  • William Starke Rosecrans biography at Civil War Home website

Further reading

  • Varney, Frank P. General Grant and the Rewriting of History: How the Destruction of General William S. Rosecrans Influenced Our Understanding of the Civil War. El Dorado Hills, CA: Savas Beatie, 2013. ISBN 978-1-61121-118-4.
  • Jones, Evan C. "A Malignant Vindictiveness: The Two-Decade Rivalry Between Ulysses S. Grant and William S. Rosecrans," in Jones, Evan C., Wiley Sword, eds., Gateway to the Confederacy: New Perspectives on the Chickamauga and Chattanooga Campaigns, 1862-1863 (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2014).
  • Moore, David G. William S. Rosecrans and the Union Victory: A Civil War Biography. Jefferson, North Carolina : McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2014. ISBN 9780786476244

External links

  •   Media related to William Starke Rosecrans at Wikimedia Commons
  • United States Congress. "William Rosecrans (id: R000440)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved on 2008-02-11
  • William S. Rosecrans biography, concentrates on the Tullahoma Campaign and the loss at Chickamauga
  • General Rosecrans' Department of The Ohio Headquarters Unit
  • Photograph of the Rosecrans memorial in Sunbury, Ohio
  • William Rosecrans biography by the Civil War Trust
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Rosecrans, William Starke" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Photograph of Major General Rosecrans and staff c. 1863 from the Maine Memory Network
  • ANC Explorer
Military offices
Preceded by Commander of the Army of the Mississippi
June 26, 1862 – October 24, 1862
Succeeded by
Preceded by
None
Commander of the Army of the Cumberland
October 24, 1862 – October 19, 1863
Succeeded by
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from California's 1st congressional district

1881–1885
Succeeded by
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Marcus Otterbourg
United States Envoy to Mexico
1868–1869
Succeeded by

william, rosecrans, william, starke, rosecrans, september, 1819, march, 1898, american, inventor, coal, company, executive, diplomat, politician, army, officer, gained, fame, role, union, general, during, american, civil, victor, prominent, western, theater, b. William Starke Rosecrans September 6 1819 March 11 1898 was an American inventor coal oil company executive diplomat politician and U S Army officer He gained fame for his role as a Union general during the American Civil War He was the victor at prominent Western Theater battles but his military career was effectively ended following his disastrous defeat at the Battle of Chickamauga in 1863 William S RosecransMember of the U S House of Representatives from California s 1st districtIn office March 4 1881 March 3 1885Preceded byHorace DavisSucceeded byBarclay HenleyU S Minister to MexicoIn office 1868 1869PresidentAndrew JohnsonPreceded byMarcus OtterbourgSucceeded byThomas H NelsonPersonal detailsBorn 1819 09 06 September 6 1819Delaware County Ohio USDiedMarch 11 1898 1898 03 11 aged 78 Redondo Beach California USResting placeArlington National CemeteryPolitical partyDemocraticAlma materUnited States Military Academy Class of 1842Nickname Old Rosy Military serviceAllegianceUnited States of AmericaUnionBranch serviceUnited States ArmyUnion ArmyYears of service1842 1854 1861 1867RankMajor GeneralCommandsArmy of the MississippiArmy of the CumberlandDepartment of the MissouriBattles warsAmerican Civil War Battle of Rich Mountain Battle of Iuka Battle of Carnifex Ferry Second Battle of Corinth Battle of Stones River Tullahoma Campaign Battle of Chickamauga Price s RaidRosecrans graduated in 1842 from the United States Military Academy where he served in engineering assignments as well as a professor before leaving the Army to pursue a career in civil engineering At the start of the Civil War leading troops from Ohio he achieved early combat success in western Virginia In 1862 in the Western Theater he won the battles of Iuka and Corinth while under the command of Maj Gen Ulysses S Grant His brusque outspoken manner and willingness to quarrel openly with superiors caused a professional rivalry with Grant as well as with Secretary of War Edwin M Stanton that would adversely affect Rosecrans career Given command of the Army of the Cumberland he fought against Confederate Gen Braxton Bragg at Stones River and later outmaneuvered him in the brilliant Tullahoma Campaign driving the Confederates from Middle Tennessee His strategic movements then caused Bragg to abandon the critical city of Chattanooga but Rosecrans pursuit of Bragg ended during the bloody Battle of Chickamauga where his unfortunately worded order mistakenly opened a gap in the Union line and Rosecrans and a third of his army were swept from the field Besieged in Chattanooga Rosecrans was relieved of command by Grant Following his humiliating defeat Rosecrans was reassigned to command the Department of Missouri where he opposed Price s Raid After the war he served in diplomatic and appointed political positions and in 1880 was elected to Congress representing California Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 American Civil War 2 1 1 Western Theater 2 1 2 Iuka 2 1 3 Corinth 2 1 4 Army of the Cumberland 2 1 5 Stones River 2 1 6 Tullahoma 2 1 7 Chickamauga 2 1 8 Missouri and resignation 3 Later life 4 Death 5 Legacy 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life and education EditWilliam Starke Rosecrans was born on a farm near Little Taylor Run in Kingston Township Delaware County Ohio the second of five sons of Crandall Rosecrans and Jemima Hopkins The first child Chauncey died in infancy Crandall was a veteran of the War of 1812 in which he served as adjutant to General William Henry Harrison and then subsequently ran a tavern and store as well as a family farm One of Crandall s heroes General John Stark was the inspiration for William s middle name 1 Rosecrans was descended from the Dutch Scandinavian nobleman Harmon Henrik Rosenkrantz 1614 1674 who arrived in New Amsterdam in 1651 2 but the family name changed spelling during the American Revolutionary War 3 His mother was the widow of Timothy Hopkins a relative of Stephen Hopkins the Colonial Governor of Rhode Island and a signer of the Declaration of Independence 4 William had little formal education in his early years relying heavily on reading books At the age of 13 he left home to work as a store clerk in Utica and later Mansfield Ohio Unable to afford college Rosecrans decided to try for an appointment to the United States Military Academy He interviewed with Congressman Alexander Harper who had been reserving his appointment for his own son but Harper was so impressed by Rosecrans that he nominated him instead 5 Despite his lack of formal education Rosecrans excelled academically at West Point particularly in mathematics but also in French drawing and English grammar It was at the academy that he received his nickname Rosy or more often Old Rosy He graduated from West Point in 1842 fifth in his class of 56 cadets which included notable future generals such as James Longstreet Abner Doubleday D H Hill and Earl Van Dorn He was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant in the prestigious Corps of Engineers reflecting his high academic achievement At his graduation he met Anna Elizabeth or Eliza Hegeman 1823 1883 of New York City and immediately fell in love They were married on August 24 1843 Their marriage lasted until her death on December 25 1883 They had eight children 6 Career EditAfter graduating from West Point Rosecrans was assigned to duty at Fort Monroe Virginia engineering sea walls After a year he requested assignment as a professor at West Point where he taught engineering and served as post commissary and quartermaster Although West Point was a strong bastion of Episcopal Protestantism during this assignment he converted to Catholicism in 1845 He wrote about this decision to his family who had raised him in the Methodist faith which inspired the youngest of his brothers Sylvester Horton Rosecrans to convert as well Sylvester would become the first bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus 7 Although most of the officers in his graduating class fought in the Mexican American War the War Department retained Rosecrans at West Point From 1847 through 1853 he served on engineering assignments in Newport Rhode Island New Bedford Massachusetts and on temporary assignment to the United States Navy at the Washington Navy Yard During this period Rosecrans sought several civilian jobs as an alternative way to support his growing family now with four children He applied for a professorship at the Virginia Military Institute in 1851 losing the position to fellow West Pointer Thomas J Jackson 8 While serving in Newport Rhode Island he volunteered his services as the engineer for the construction of St Mary s Roman Catholic Church The church is best known as the site of the wedding of John F Kennedy and Jacqueline Bouvier in 1953 and was one of the largest churches constructed in the United States at that time There is a memorial window in Rosecrans honor in the church Rosecrans suffered a period of failing health and resigned from the Army in 1854 moving into civilian fields He took over a mining business in Western Virginia today West Virginia and ran it extremely successfully He designed and installed one of the first complete lock and dam systems in Western Virginia on the Coal River today recognized as the Coal River Locks Dams and Log Booms Archeological District In Cincinnati he and two partners built one of the first oil refineries west of the Allegheny Mountains He obtained patents for many inventions including the first kerosene lamp to successfully burn a round wick and a more effective method of manufacturing soap While Rosecrans was president of the Preston Coal Oil Company in 1859 he was burned severely when an experimental safety oil lamp exploded setting the refinery on fire It took him 18 months to recover and the resulting facial scars gave him the appearance of having a perpetual smirk As he concluded recovering from those injuries the Civil War began 9 American Civil War Edit Just days after Fort Sumter surrendered Rosecrans offered his services to Ohio Governor William Dennison who assigned him as a volunteer aide de camp to Maj Gen George B McClellan who commanded all Ohio volunteer forces at the beginning of the war Promoted to the rank of colonel Rosecrans briefly commanded the 23rd Ohio Infantry regiment whose members included Rutherford B Hayes and William McKinley both future presidents He was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army ranking from May 16 1861 10 Robert E Lee s Western Virginia campaign after its plain failure was virtually abandoned by the Government Rosecrans was esteemed in the South as one of the best generals the North had in the field He was declared by military critics who could not be accused of partiality to have clearly outgeneraled Lee who made the entire object of his campaign to surround the Dutch General Edward A Pollard Southern History of the War 1865 11 His plans and decisions proved extremely effective in the Western Virginia Campaign His victories at Rich Mountain and Corrick s Ford in July 1861 were among the first Union victories of the war but his superior Maj Gen McClellan received the credit Rosecrans then prevented by much maneuvering but little fighting 12 Confederate Brig Gen John B Floyd and his superior Gen Robert E Lee from recapturing the area that became the state of West Virginia When McClellan was summoned to Washington after the defeat suffered by Federal forces at the First Battle of Bull Run General in Chief Winfield Scott suggested that McClellan turn over the West Virginia command to Rosecrans McClellan agreed and Rosecrans assumed command of what was to become the Department of Western Virginia 13 Rosecrans the Brave sheet music cover In late 1861 Rosecrans planned for a winter campaign to capture the strategic town of Winchester Virginia turning the Confederate flank at Manassas He traveled to Washington to obtain McClellan s approval McClellan disapproved however telling Rosecrans that putting 20 000 Union men into Winchester would be countered by Confederates moving an equal number into the vicinity He also transferred 20 000 of Rosecrans s 22 000 men to serve under Brig Gen Frederick W Lander leaving Rosecrans with insufficient resources to do any campaigning In March 1862 Rosecrans s department was converted to the Mountain Department which was given to political general John C Fremont leaving Rosecrans without a command He served briefly in Washington where his opinions clashed with those of newly appointed Secretary of War Edwin M Stanton on tactics and Union command organization for the Shenandoah Valley campaign against Stonewall Jackson Stanton became one of Rosecrans s most vocal critics One of Stanton s assignments for Rosecrans was to act as a guide for Brig Gen Louis Blenker s division Fremont s department in the valley and Rosecrans became intimately involved in the political and command confusion in the campaign against Jackson in the Valley 14 Western Theater Edit Rosecrans was transferred in May 1862 to the Western Theater and received the command of two divisions the Right Wing of Maj Gen John Pope s Army of the Mississippi He took an active part in the siege of Corinth under Maj Gen Henry W Halleck He received command of the entire army on June 26 and in July added the responsibility of commanding the District of Corinth In these roles he was the subordinate of Maj Gen Ulysses S Grant who commanded the District of Western Tennessee and the Army of the Tennessee from whom he received direction in the Iuka Corinth campaign in September and October 1862 15 Iuka Edit Main article Battle of Iuka Opening of Iuka Corinth Campaign Battle of IukaConfederate Maj Gen Sterling Price had been ordered by Gen Braxton Bragg to move his army from Tupelo toward Nashville Tennessee in conjunction with Bragg s Kentucky offensive Price s army settled in Iuka and awaited the arrival of Maj Gen Earl Van Dorn s Army of West Tennessee The two generals intended to unite and attack Grant s lines of communication in western Tennessee which would prevent Buell s reinforcement if Grant reacted the way they expected or might allow them to follow Bragg and support his Northern invasion if Grant acted more passively 16 Grant did not wait to be attacked approving a plan proposed by Rosecrans to converge on Price with two columns before Van Dorn could reinforce him Grant sent Brig Gen Edward Ord with three Army of the Tennessee divisions about 8 000 men along the Memphis and Charleston Railroad to move upon Iuka from the northwest Rosecrans s army would march in concert along the Mobile and Ohio Railroad swinging into Iuka from the southwest closing the escape route for Price s army Grant moved with Ord s headquarters and had little tactical control over Rosecrans during the battle 17 While Ord advanced toward Iuka on the night of September 18 Rosecrans was late having farther to march over roads mired in mud furthermore one of his divisions took a wrong turn and had to countermarch to the correct road That night he notified Grant that he was 20 miles 32 km away but planned to start marching again at 4 30 a m and should reach Iuka by midafternoon on September 19 Considering this delay Grant ordered Ord to move within 4 miles 6 4 km of the town but to await the sound of fighting between Rosecrans and Price before engaging the Confederates Rosecrans army marched early on September 19 but instead of using two roads as originally planned it took only one of them Rosecrans was concerned that if he used both roads the two halves of his divided force could not support each other if the Confederates attacked 18 I cannot speak too highly of the energy and skill displayed by General Rosecrans in the attack and of the endurance of the troops under him General Ord s command showed untiring zeal but the direction taken by the enemy prevented them from taking the active part they desired Grant s first report of the battle September 20 1862 19 If it was the object of the enemy to make their way into Kentucky they were defeated in that if to hold their position until Van Dorn could come up on the southwest of Corinth and make a simultaneous attack they were defeated in that Our only defeat was in not capturing the enemy army or destroying it as I had hoped to do It was a part of General Hamilton s command that did the fighting directed entirely by that cool and deserving officer Grant s second report of the battle October 22 1862 20 Rosecrans was within 2 miles 3 2 km of the town on September 19 pushing back Confederate pickets when his lead element was struck suddenly by a Confederate division Fighting which Price later stated he had never seen surpassed continued from 4 30 p m until after dark A fresh north wind blowing from Ord s position in the direction of Iuka caused an acoustic shadow that prevented the sound of the guns from reaching him and he and Grant knew nothing of the engagement until after it was over Ord s troops stood idly while the fighting raged only a few miles away 21 During the night both Rosecrans and Ord deployed their forces in the expectation of a renewal of the engagement at daylight but the Confederate forces had withdrawn Price had been planning this move since September 18 and Rosecrans s attack merely delayed his departure The Confederates used the road that the Union army had not blocked meeting up with Van Dorn s army five days later Rosecrans s cavalry and some infantry pursued Price for 15 miles 24 km but owing to the exhausted condition of his troops his column was outrun and he gave up the pursuit Grant had partially accomplished his objective Price was not able to link up with Bragg in Kentucky but Rosecrans had not been able to destroy the Confederate army or prevent it from linking up with Van Dorn and threatening the critical railroad junction at Corinth 22 The Battle of Iuka marked the beginning of a long professional enmity between Rosecrans and Grant The Northern press gave accounts very favorable to Rosecrans at Grant s expense Some rumors circulated that the reason Ord s column had not attacked in conjunction with Rosecrans was not that the battle had been inaudible but that Grant had been drunk and incompetent Grant s first report of the battle was highly complimentary to Rosecrans but his second written after Rosecrans had published his own report took a markedly negative turn His third statement was in his Personal Memoirs where he wrote I was disappointed at the result of the battle of Iuka but I had so high an opinion of General Rosecrans that I found no fault at the time 23 Corinth Edit Main article Second Battle of Corinth Second phase of the Iuka Corinth Campaign Battle of Corinth October 3 1862 Battle of Corinth October 4 1862Price s army joined Van Dorn s on September 28 Van Dorn as the senior officer took command of the combined force Grant became certain that Corinth was their next target The Confederates hoped to seize Corinth from an unexpected direction isolating Rosecrans from reinforcements and then sweep into Middle Tennessee Grant sent word to Rosecrans to be prepared for an attack but despite the warning Rosecrans was not convinced that Corinth was necessarily the target of Van Dorn s advance He believed that the Confederate commander would not be foolhardy enough to attack the fortified town and might well instead choose to strike the Mobile and Ohio Railroad and maneuver the Federals out of their position 24 On the morning of October 3 three of Rosecrans s divisions advanced into old Confederate rifle pits north and northwest of town Van Dorn began his assault at 10 a m as a planned double envelopment in which he would open the fight on Rosecrans s left in the hope that Rosecrans would weaken his right to reinforce his left at which time Price would make the main assault against the Federal right and enter the works The Confederates forced their way through a temporary gap in the line about 1 30 p m and the whole Union line fell back to within half a mile of the redoubts 25 So far the advantage had been with the Confederates Rosecrans had been driven back at all points and night found his entire army except pickets inside the redoubts Both sides had been exhausted by the fighting The weather had been hot with a high of 94 F 34 C and water was scarce causing many men to nearly faint from their exertions Rosecrans s biographer William M Lamers reported that Rosecrans was confident at the end of the first day of battle saying We ve got them where we want them and that some of the general s associates claimed that he was in magnificent humor Peter Cozzens however suggested that Rosecrans was tired and bewildered certain only he was badly outnumbered at least three to one by his reckoning 26 Civil War historian Steven E Woodworth portrayed Rosecrans s conduct in a negative light Rosecrans had not done well He had failed to anticipate the enemy s action put little more than half his troops into the battle and called on his men to fight on ground they could not possibly hold He had sent a series of confusing and unrealistic orders to his division commanders and had done nothing to coordinate their activities while he personally remained safely back in Corinth The movements of the army that day had had nothing to do with any plan of his to develop the enemy or make a fighting withdrawal The troops and their officers had simply held on as best as they could 27 On the second day of battle the Confederates moved forward at 9 a m to meet heavy Union artillery fire storming Battery Powell and Battery Robinett where desperate hand to hand fighting occurred A brief incursion into the town of Corinth was repulsed After a Federal counterattack recaptured Battery Powell Van Dorn ordered a general retreat At 4 p m reinforcements from Grant under the command of Brig Gen James B McPherson arrived from Jackson But the Battle of Corinth had effectively been over since 1 p m and the Confederates were in full retreat 28 It lives in the memory of every soldier who fought that day how his General plunged into the thickest of the conflict fought like a private soldier dealt sturdy blows with the flat of his sword on the runaways and fairly drove them to stand Then came a quick rally which his magnificent bearing inspired a storm of grape from the batteries tore its way through the Rebel ranks reinforcements which Rosecrans sent flying gave impetus to the National advance and the charging column was speedily swept back outside the entrenchments Whitelaw Reid Ohio in the War 29 Once again Rosecrans s performance during the second day of the battle has been the subject of dispute among historians His biographer Lamers paints a romantic picture One of Davies men David Henderson watched Rosecrans as he dashed in front of the Union lines Bullets carried his hat away His hair flew in the wind As he rode along he shouted Soldiers Stand by your country He was the only general I ever knew Henderson said later who was closer to the enemy than we were who fought at the front Henderson after the war a Congressman from Ohio and Speaker of the House of Representatives wrote that Rosecrans was the Central leading and victorious spirit By his splendid example in the thickest of the fight he succeeded in restoring the line before it was completely demoralized and the men brave when bravely led fought again 30 Peter Cozzens author of a recent book length study of Iuka and Corinth came to the opposite conclusion Rosecrans was in the thick of battle but his presence was hardly inspiring The Ohioan had lost all control of his infamous temper and he cursed as cowards everyone who pushed past him until he too lost hope Rosecrans s histrionics nearly cost him his life On the second day I was everywhere on the line of battle he wrote with disingenuous pride Temple Clark of my staff was shot through the breast My saber tache strap was caught by a bullet and my gloves were stained with the blood of a staff officer wounded at my side An alarm spread that I was killed but it was soon stopped by my appearance on the field 31 Rosecrans s performance immediately after the battle was lackluster Grant had given him specific orders to pursue Van Dorn without delay but he did not begin his march until the morning of October 5 explaining that his troops needed rest and the thicketed country made progress difficult by day and impossible by night At 1 p m on October 4 when pursuit would have been most effective Rosecrans rode along his line to deny in person a rumor that he had been slain At Battery Robinett he dismounted bared his head and told his soldiers I stand in the presence of brave men and I take my hat off to you 32 Army of the Cumberland Edit Rosecrans s principal opponent Gen Braxton Bragg Rosecrans once again found that he was a hero in the Northern press On October 24 he was given command of XIV Corps which because he was also given command of the Department of the Cumberland would soon be renamed the Army of the Cumberland replacing the ineffectual Maj Gen Don Carlos Buell who had just fought the inconclusive Battle of Perryville Kentucky against Gen Braxton Bragg but was accused of moving too cautiously Rosecrans was promoted to the rank of major general of volunteers as opposed to his brigadier rank in the regular army The promotion was applied retroactive to March 21 1862 so that he would outrank fellow Maj Gen Thomas Thomas had earlier been offered Buell s command but turned down the opportunity out of a sense of personal loyalty Grant was not unhappy that Rosecrans was leaving his command 33 In his role as an army commander Rosecrans became one of the most popular generals in the Union Army He was known to his men as Old Rosy not only because of his last name the source for that nickname at West Point but because of his large red nose which was described as intensified Roman As a devout Catholic he carried a crucifix on his watch chain and a rosary in his pocket and he delighted in keeping his staff up half the night debating religious doctrine He could swing swiftly from bristling anger to good natured amusement which endeared him to his men 34 Stones River Edit Main article Battle of Stones River Movements and positions the night of December 30 to December 31 December 31 8 00 a m December 31 11 00 a m January 2 4 00 p m A romantic image of Rosecrans at Murfreesboro January 2 1863 Rosecrans s predecessor Buell had been relieved because of his desultory pursuit of Confederate Gen Braxton Bragg following the Battle of Perryville And yet Rosecrans displayed similar caution remaining in Nashville while he reprovisioned his army and improved the training of his cavalry forces By early December 1862 General in Chief Henry W Halleck had lost his patience He wrote to Rosecrans If you remain one more week in Nashville I cannot prevent your removal Rosecrans replied I need no other stimulus to make me do my duty than the knowledge of what it is To threats of removal or the like I must be permitted to say that I am insensible 35 In late December Rosecrans began his march against Bragg s Army of Tennessee encamped outside Murfreesboro Tennessee The Battle of Stones River was the bloodiest battle of the war in terms of percentages of casualties Both Rosecrans and Bragg planned to attack the other s right flank but Bragg moved first early in the morning of December 31 driving the Union army back into a small defensive perimeter As he realized the severity of the surprise attack Rosecrans demonstrated the nervous hyperactivity for which he was known in battle He personally rallied his men along the line and gave direct orders to any brigades regiments or companies he encountered Disregarding his own safety he rode back and forth at the very front of his line and sometimes between his men and the enemy 36 As Rosecrans raced across the battlefield directing units seeming ubiquitous to his men his uniform was covered with blood from his friend and chief of staff Col Julius Garesche beheaded by a cannonball while riding alongside 37 When disaster had enveloped half the army and from that time to the end Rosecrans was magnificent Rising superior to the disaster that in a single moment had annihilated his carefully prepared plans he grasped in his single hands the fortunes of the day He stemmed the tide of retreat hurried brigades and divisions to the point of danger massed artillery infused into them his own dauntless spirit and out of defeat itself fashioned the weapons of victory As at Rich Mountain Iuka and Corinth it was his personal presence that magnetized his plans into success Whitelaw Reid Ohio in the War Volume I 38 The armies paused on January 1 but the following day Bragg attacked again this time against a strong position on Rosecrans s left flank The Union defense was formidable and the attack was repulsed with heavy losses Bragg withdrew his army to Tullahoma effectively ceding control of Middle Tennessee to the Union The battle was important to Union morale following its defeat at the Battle of Fredericksburg a few weeks earlier and President Abraham Lincoln wrote to Rosecrans You gave us a hard earned victory which had there been a defeat instead the nation could scarcely have lived over 39 Tullahoma Edit Tullahoma Campaign Confederate Union Rosecrans s XIV Corps was soon redesignated the Army of the Cumberland which he kept in place occupying Murfreesboro for almost six months spending the time resupplying and training for he was reluctant to advance on the muddy winter roads He received numerous entreaties from President Lincoln Secretary of War Stanton and General in Chief Halleck to resume campaigning against Bragg but rebuffed them through the winter and spring A primary concern of the government was that if Rosecrans continued to sit idly the Confederates might move units from Bragg s army in an attempt to relieve the pressure that Union Maj Gen Ulysses S Grant was applying to Vicksburg Mississippi Lincoln wrote to Rosecrans I would not push you to any rashness but I am very anxious that you do your utmost short of rashness to keep Bragg from getting lost to help Johnston against Grant 40 Rosecrans offered an excuse that if he started to move against Bragg Bragg would likely relocate his entire army to Mississippi and threaten Grant s Vicksburg Campaign even more thus by not attacking Bragg he was helping Grant 41 Frustration with Rosecrans s excuses led Halleck to threaten to relieve him if he did not move but in the end he merely protested against the expense to which Rosecrans put the government for telegrams 42 On June 2 Halleck telegraphed that if Rosecrans was unwilling to move some of his troops would be sent to Mississippi to reinforce Grant Rosecrans sent a questionnaire to his corps and division commanders in the hopes of documenting support for his position that Bragg had so far detached no significant forces to Mississippi that advancing the Army of the Cumberland would do nothing to prevent any such transfer and that any immediate advance was not a good idea Fifteen of the seventeen senior generals supported most of Rosecrans s positions and the counsel against advancing was unanimous The only dissenter was the newly assigned chief of staff Brig Gen James A Garfield who recommended an immediate advance but historian Steven E Woodworth opines that he may have been most concerned with the political impression his statement would make in Washington 43 On June 16 Halleck wired a blunt message Is it your intention to make an immediate movement forward A definite answer yes or no is required Rosecrans responded to this ultimatum If immediate means tonight or tomorrow no If it means as soon as all things are ready say five days yes Seven days later early in the morning of June 24 Rosecrans reported that the Army of the Cumberland had begun to move against Bragg 44 The Tullahoma Campaign June 24 July 3 1863 was characterized by flawless maneuvers and very low casualties as Rosecrans forced Bragg to retreat back to Chattanooga Tullahoma is considered a brilliant campaign by many historians 45 Abraham Lincoln wrote The flanking of Bragg at Shelbyville Tullahoma and Chattanooga is the most splendid piece of strategy I know of Union Cavalry Corps commander David S Stanley wrote If any student of the military art desires to make a study of a model campaign let him take his maps and General Rosecrans s orders for the daily movements of his campaign No better example of successful strategy was carried out during the war than in the Tullahoma campaign 46 When Rosecrans troops entered Shelbyville they were able to rescue captured Union spy Pauline Cushman Cushman had been scouting the movements of Gen Bragg when she was captured Gen John Hunt Morgan was one of her escorts to Gen Bragg for questioning A military trial found her guilty she was to be hanged as a spy Her rescue came just three days prior to her scheduled execution Rosecrans and Cushman went on to raise over one million dollars for soldiers aid at the 1863 Cincinnati Ohio Sanitary Fair citation needed In contrast Rosecrans had approved the courtmartial and hanging of two Confederate Officers Lawrence Orton Williams and Walter Peters on June 9 1863 at Franklin Tenn after these two officers had disguised themselves as Union Officers for the purposes of spying 47 48 Rosecrans did not receive all of the public acclaim his campaign might have under different circumstances The day it ended was the day Gen Robert E Lee launched the ill fated Pickett s Charge and lost the Battle of Gettysburg The following day Vicksburg surrendered to Grant Secretary Stanton telegraphed Rosecrans Lee s Army overthrown Grant victorious You and your noble army now have a chance to give the finishing blow to the rebellion Will you neglect the chance Rosecrans was infuriated by this attitude and responded Just received your cheering telegram announcing the fall of Vicksburg and confirming the defeat of Lee You do not appear to observe the fact that this noble army has driven the rebels from middle Tennessee I beg in behalf of this army that the War Department may not overlook so great an event because it is not written in letters of blood 49 Chickamauga Edit Main article Battle of Chickamauga Initial movements in the Chickamauga Campaign August 15 September 8 1863 September 18 movements on the eve of the Battle of Chickamauga Actions morning of September 19 Actions early afternoon of September 19 Actions late afternoon to dark September 19 Polk s Right Wing assaults morning of September 20 Longstreet s Left Wing assaults mid day September 20 Defense of Horseshoe Ridge and Union retreat afternoon and evening of September 20Rosecrans did not immediately pursue Bragg and give the finishing blow to the rebellion as Stanton had urged He paused to regroup and study the logistically difficult choices of pursuit into the mountainous regions to the west and south of Chattanooga When he was ready to move he once again maneuvered in a way to disadvantage Bragg The Confederates abandoned Chattanooga and withdrew into the mountains of northwestern Georgia Rosecrans threw aside his previous caution under the assumption that Bragg would continue to retreat and began to pursue with his army over three routes that left his corps commanders dangerously far apart At the Battle of Davis s Cross Roads on September 11 Bragg came close to ambushing and destroying one of Rosecrans s isolated corps Realizing the threat at last Rosecrans issued urgent orders to concentrate his army and the two opponents faced each other across West Chickamauga Creek Brig Gen Thomas J Wood The Battle of Chickamauga began on September 19 with Bragg attacking the not fully concentrated Union army but he was unable to break through Rosecrans s defensive positions On the second day of battle however disaster befell Rosecrans in the form of his poorly worded order in response to a poorly understood situation The order was directed to Brig Gen Thomas J Wood to close up and support General Joseph J Reynolds s division planning to fill an assumed gap in the line However Wood s subsequent movement actually opened up a new division sized gap in the line By coincidence Lt Gen James Longstreet had planned to lead a massive assault in that very area and the Confederates exploited the gap to full effect shattering Rosecrans s right flank The majority of units on the Union right fell back in disorder toward Chattanooga Rosecrans Garfield and two of the corps commanders although attempting to rally retreating units soon joined them in the rush to safety Rosecrans decided to proceed in haste to Chattanooga in order to organize his returning men and the city defenses He sent Garfield to Maj Gen George H Thomas with orders to take command of the forces remaining at Chickamauga and withdraw 50 The Union army managed to escape complete disaster because of the stout defense organized by Thomas on Horseshoe Ridge heroism that earned him the nickname Rock of Chickamauga The army withdrew that night to fortified positions in Chattanooga Bragg had not succeeded in his objective to destroy the Army of the Cumberland but the Battle of Chickamauga was nonetheless the worst Union defeat in the Western Theater Thomas urged Rosecrans to rejoin the army and lead it but Rosecrans physically exhausted and psychologically a beaten man remained in Chattanooga President Lincoln attempted to prop up the morale of his general telegraphing Be of good cheer We have unabated confidence in you and your soldiers and officers In the main you must be the judge as to what is to be done If I was to suggest I would say save your army by taking strong positions until Burnside joins you Privately Lincoln told John Hay that Rosecrans seemed confused and stunned like a duck hit on the head 51 Whether he did or did not know that Thomas still held the field it was a catastrophe that Rosecrans did not himself ride to Thomas and send Garfield to Chattanooga Had he gone to the front in person and shown himself to his men as at Stone River he might by his personal presence have plucked victory from disaster although it is doubtful whether he could have done more than Thomas did Rosecrans however rode to Chattanooga instead The Edge of Glory Rosecrans biographer William M Lamers 52 Although Rosecrans s men were protected by strong defensive positions the supply lines into Chattanooga were tenuous and subject to Confederate cavalry raids Bragg s army occupied the heights surrounding the city and laid siege upon the Union forces Rosecrans demoralized by his defeat proved unable to break the siege without reinforcements Only hours after the defeat at Chickamauga Secretary Stanton ordered Maj Gen Joseph Hooker to travel to Chattanooga with 15 000 men in two corps from the Army of the Potomac in Virginia Maj Gen Ulysses S Grant was ordered to send 20 000 men under his chief subordinate Maj Gen William T Sherman from Vicksburg Mississippi On September 29 Stanton ordered Grant to go to Chattanooga himself 53 as commander of the newly created Military Division of the Mississippi Grant was given the option of replacing the demoralized Rosecrans with Thomas Although Grant did not have good personal relations with either general he selected Thomas to command the Army of the Cumberland Grant traveled over the treacherous mountain supply line roads and arrived in Chattanooga on October 23 On the morning of the 21st we took the train for the front reaching Stevenson Alabama after dark Rosecrans was there on his way north He came into my car and we held a brief interview in which he described very clearly the situation at Chattanooga and made some excellent suggestions as to what should be done My only wonder was that he had not carried them out Ulysses S Grant Memoirs 54 Grant executed a plan originally devised by Rosecrans and Brig Gen William F Baldy Smith to open the Cracker Line and resupply the army and in a series of battles for Chattanooga November 23 25 1863 routed Bragg s army and sent it retreating into Georgia 55 Missouri and resignation Edit Rosecrans was sent to Cincinnati to await further orders but ultimately he would play no further large part in the fighting He was given command of the Department of Missouri from January to December 1864 when he was active in opposing Sterling Price s Missouri raid During the 1864 Republican National Convention his former chief of staff James Garfield head of the Ohio delegation telegraphed Rosecrans to ask if he would consider running to be Abraham Lincoln s vice president The Republicans that year were seeking a War Democrat to run with Lincoln under the temporary name of National Union Party Rosecrans replied in a cryptically positive manner but Garfield never received the return telegram Friends of Rosecrans speculated that Edwin M Stanton Secretary of War intercepted and suppressed it 56 Rosecrans was mustered out of the U S volunteer service on January 15 1866 On June 30 1866 President Andrew Johnson nominated Rosecrans for appointment as a brevet major general in the regular army to rank from March 13 1865 in gratitude for his actions at Stones River and the U S Senate confirmed the appointment on July 25 1866 Rosecrans resigned from the regular army on March 28 1867 On February 27 1889 by act of Congress he was re appointed a brigadier general in the regular army and was placed on the retired list on March 1 1889 57 After the war Rosecrans became a companion of the District of Columbia Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States a military society of officers who had served in the Union armed forces and their descendants Later life Edit Rosecrans in later life After the war Rosecrans became interested in railroads and was one of the eleven incorporators of the Southern Pacific Railroad but his valuable interests in the stock of the railroad were lost to some of the unscrupulous financiers who were his business partners From 1868 to 1869 Rosecrans served as U S Minister to Mexico but was replaced after just five months when his old nemesis Ulysses Grant became president During this brief service he became convinced that Mexico would benefit from a narrow gauge railway and telegraph line from Tampico to the coast but this venture from 1869 through 1873 was a failure 58 Rosecrans then became interested in civil administration and wrote a book Popular Government with a former newspaperman Josiah Riley which advocated registration and voting reforms He was approached by various political parties to run for high office Governor of Ohio Union party 1866 governor of California Democratic Party 1868 governor of Ohio Democratic Party 1869 U S Representative from Nevada Democratic Party 1876 He refused all of these offers because they conflicted with potentially promising business ventures leading him to be referred to by the nickname The Great Decliner 59 In 1869 Rosecrans bought 16 000 acres 65 km2 of Rancho San Pedro in the Los Angeles basin for 2 50 per acre 620 km2 a low price possibly because the land was deemed worthless for lack of a spring for water The ranch dubbed Rosecrans Rancho was bordered by what later was Florence Avenue on the north Redondo Beach Boulevard on the south Central Avenue on the east and Arlington Avenue on the west By the time of Rosecrans s death his son Carl was living on the estate but most of the land had been sold parcel by parcel to support the financial needs of mining ventures in which Rosecrans invested 60 In 1880 Rosecrans was elected U S Representative as a Democrat from California s 1st congressional district That same year James Garfield was elected President as a Republican Rosecrans was distressed to see that Garfield s campaign literature played up his role in the war at Rosecrans s expense Their former friendship was irretrievably broken After Garfield s assassination Charles A Dana capitalized on the tragedy by publishing the letters written by Garfield after Chickamauga to then Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P Chase the letters may have been the major reason for Rosecrans s loss of political support at the time 61 Rosecrans was reelected in 1882 and became the chairman of the House Military Affairs Committee a position in which he publicly opposed a bill that would provide a pension to former President Grant and his wife Unaware of the serious financial condition of Grant s family Rosecrans objected that some of Grant s official statements were false and which he knew to be false at the time he made them and which I have shown in my official reports to be false I cannot say to the people of this country that a business which has been conducted as to rob poor people of millions and which if done on a smaller scale would have sent its managers to prison shall be considered as important when the principal manager has allowed a great name to be used as the instrument of the robbery The bill was passed over his objections When a bill was introduced in 1889 to restore Rosecrans s rank and place him on the retired list some representatives objected based on Rosecrans s actions against Grant in 1885 but the bill was passed 62 Rosecrans did not seek re election in 1884 He served as a Regent of the University of California in 1884 and 1885 63 Although Rosecrans was mentioned on a few occasions as a possible presidential candidate the first Democratic president elected after the war was Grover Cleveland in 1884 Newspaper stories circulated that Rosecrans was under serious consideration to be appointed his Secretary of War but he was appointed instead as the Register of the Treasury serving from 1885 to 1893 64 Rosecrans spoke at a grand reunion of veterans north and south at the Chickamauga battlefield on September 19 1889 delivering a moving address praising national reconciliation 65 The gathering led to Congress establishing the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park the following year the nation s first national battlefield park 66 In 1896 he was awarded the Laetare Medal the oldest and most prestigious award for American Catholics by the University of Notre Dame 67 Death EditIn February 1898 Rosecrans suffered from a cold that turned into pneumonia but appeared to recover successfully Then he learned that one of his favorite grandchildren Rosecrans Toole the son of Lily and Joseph Kemp Toole the first Governor of Montana had died of diphtheria He was seized with grief and his health failed precipitously He died on March 11 1898 at Rancho Sausal Redondo Redondo Beach California 68 His casket lay in state in Los Angeles City Hall covered by the headquarters flag that flew over Stones River and Chickamauga In 1908 his remains were interred in Arlington National Cemetery 69 Legacy EditFort Rosecrans National Cemetery in San Diego California is named in his honor Major streets named after William Rosecrans include Rosecrans Avenue a major east west street that runs through the southern part of Los Angeles County and Rosecrans Street in San Diego which runs near the aforementioned cemetery A school General Rosecrans Elementary on Rosecrans and Acacia Avenues bears his name in the city of Compton a Los Angeles suburb Another elementary school General Rosecrans Elementary in Sunbury Ohio is also named after him A simple memorial was constructed on the site of his birthplace and childhood home Just north of Sunbury Ohio a large boulder surrounded by a wrought iron fence holds a plaque in memoriam and rests beside a rural road that bears his name An equestrian statue resting on a 55 000 pound black granite boulder now has a place on the city of Sunbury square 70 Rosecrans Headquarters in the buildup to the Chickamauga Campaign was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978 71 He was the first colonel of the regiment to which I belonged my boyhood ideal of a great soldier and I gladly pay him tribute President William McKinley 1895 remarks at the dedication of the Ohio Monument at Chickamauga 72 The SS Rosecrans was a troop transport ship used in the early 20th century that saw service in the Pacific 73 74 75 76 The U S A T William S Rosecrans another similarly named ship was built as Liberty Ship hull 570 by the Oregon Shipbuilding Corporation and rated to hold 504 troops 77 U S A T Rosecrans at the foot of University Street next to U S A T Lawton U S A T Rosecrans and Lawton docked at the foot of University St in Seattle preparing to transport U S troops to China 1900 U S A T Rosecrans sailing for Nome With Co s A and K 7th Reg No 1 Sailing out of SeattleSee also Edit American Civil War portal Politics portalList of American Civil War generals Union Fortress RosecransNotes Edit Lamers p 9 The Rosenkrans family in Europe and America Comp by Allen Rosenkrans Published 1900 by New Jersey Herald Press in Newton N J 1 Gordon p 110 Lamers pp 8 9 11 Lamers p 9 A biography at the Civil War Home website claims that Rosecrans was the great grandson of Stephen Hopkins Lamers pp 11 12 Lamers pp 11 14 Eicher Civil War High Commands p 461 The number of children is disputed Lamers pp 442 446 47 refers to five by name Louis a Catholic priest Lily Carl Anita and Mary Sister St Charles of the Brown County Ursalines A Rosenkrantz family website and the Department of the Ohio memorial website give eight names William died in infancy Adrian Louis Mary Louise Lily R Anna D Carl Frederick and Charlotte Lamers p 15 Meehan The Catholic Encyclopedia Lamers pp 15 17 Gordon p 111 Warner p 410 Lamers pp 17 19 Gordon p 111 Eicher Civil War High Commands p 461 Lamers pp 20 26 Gordon pp 111 12 Eicher Civil War High Commands p 461 Lamers pp 61 62 McPherson p 303 Lamers pp 27 39 Gordon pp 113 14 Eicher Civil War High Commands p 461 Lamers pp 64 82 Cozzens Shenandoah 1862 pp 51 52 229 238 Lamers pp 70 82 Gordon pp 114 15 Warner p 410 Eicher Civil War High Commands p 461 Hattaway and Jones p 250 Eicher Longest Night pp 371 72 Woodworth pp 218 19 Lamers p 103 Welcher pp 620 21 Woodworth pp 219 22 Lamers p 103 Welcher pp 620 21 Woodworth pp 219 22 Lamers pp 103 06 Lamers p 122 Lamers p 123 Woodworth pp 221 23 Eicher Longest Night pp 372 74 Welcher pp 622 23 Hattaway and Jones p 253 Welcher p 623 Lamers pp 115 16 Lamers pp 120 30 Lamers pp 133 35 Woodworth pp 226 28 Cozzens Darkest Days pp 160 74 Eicher Longest Night pp 375 77 Korn p 40 Kennedy p 131 Lamers pp 141 42 Cozzens Darkest Days p 224 Woodworth p 229 Lamers pp 148 52 Cozzens Darkest Days pp 235 76 Welcher p 557 Reid vol I p 325 Lamers p 149 Cozzens Darkest Days pp 251 52 Foote p 725 Lamers pp 171 82 Gordon pp 119 22 Foote p 80 Cozzens No Better Place to Die p 26 Lamers pp 195 96 Cozzens No Better Place to Die p 129 Lamers pp 202 34 Cozzens No Better Place to Die p 166 Reid p 334 Cozzens No Better Place to Die p 207 Lamers pp 234 43 Woodworth p 17 Woodworth p 6 Esposito text for map 108 Woodworth p 17 Lamers pp 269 71 Woodworth p 18 For example Lamers p 290 Woodworth p 42 Korn p 30 a model of planning and execution Lamers p 290 ExecutedToday com 1863 Lawrence Williams and Walter Peters bold CSA spies Retrieved July 17 2020 The Execution of Williams and Peters Exit78 June 2 2013 Retrieved July 17 2020 Lamers p 291 Korn p 30 Woodworth p 134 Cozzens This Terrible Sound pp 402 05 Robertson 2008 pp 42 43 Robertson stated that Rosecrans witnessing the destruction of Lytle s brigade turned toward the rear in apparent despair the army commander s spirit broken Cozzens This Terrible Sound pp 520 21 Esposito map 114 Woodworth pp 129 31 Lamers p 361 Lamers p 355 Cozzens Shipwreck pp 2 3 Grant vol 2 p 28 Woodworth Six Armies p 151 Lamers pp 393 400 Cozzens Shipwreck pp 18 2 6 Esposito map 115 Lamers p 424 The Union Army vol 8 pp 216 17 Eicher Civil War High Commands pp 462 708 Lamers p 447 Lamers pp 440 41 Lamers pp 441 42 Frequently Asked Questions about Gardena County of Los Angeles Public Library website Lamers p 448 Lamers pp 408 446 Lamers pp 447 48 ROSECRANS William Starke Biographical Directory of the U S Congress Lamers p 446 Robertson 1995 pp 28 29 https www battlefields org learn articles our first national military park Chickamauga and Chattanooga NMP An Administrative History Chapter I Recipients The Laetare Medal University of Notre Dame Retrieved August 2 2020 Rosecrans is Dead Chicago Tribune March 12 1898 p 13 Retrieved February 8 2010 Lamers p 449 Eicher Civil War High Commands p 462 Lepola Lenny C Paul Seeks Memorial Site for General Rosecrans Sunbury News April 23 2009 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 Retrieved August 17 2014 Lamers p 449 Mowbray Tate E 1986 Transpacific Steam The Story of Steam Navigation from the Pacific Coast of North America to the Far East and the Antipodes 1867 1941 ISBN 9780845347928 Rogers Robert F 1995 Destiny s Landfall A History of Guam ISBN 9780824816780 U S A T ROSECRANS transporting U S Troops out of Seattle en route to China 1900 Silverstone Paul May 13 2013 The New Navy 1883 1922 ISBN 978 1135865436 Liberty Ships built by Oregon Shipbuilding Corporation and by Kaiser Vancouver during World War II Vancouver Washington for U S Maritime Commission www usmm org Retrieved July 17 2020 References EditCozzens Peter No Better Place to Die The Battle of Stones River Urbana University of Illinois Press 1990 ISBN 0 252 01652 1 Cozzens Peter Shenandoah 1862 Stonewall Jackson s Valley Campaign Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 8078 3200 4 Cozzens Peter The Darkest Days of the War The Battles of Iuka and Corinth Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 1997 ISBN 0 8078 2320 1 Cozzens Peter The Shipwreck of Their Hopes The Battles for Chattanooga Urbana University of Illinois Press 1994 ISBN 0 252 01922 9 Cozzens Peter This Terrible Sound The Battle of Chickamauga Urbana University of Illinois Press 1992 ISBN 0 252 02236 X Eicher David J The Longest Night A Military History of the Civil War New York Simon amp Schuster 2001 ISBN 0 684 84944 5 Eicher John H and David J Eicher Civil War High Commands Stanford CA Stanford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 8047 3641 3 Esposito Vincent J West Point Atlas of American Wars New York Frederick A Praeger 1959 OCLC 5890637 The collection of maps without explanatory text is available online at the West Point website Foote Shelby The Civil War A Narrative Vol 2 Fredericksburg to Meridian New York Random House 1958 ISBN 0 394 49517 9 Gordon Leslie J The Failed Relationship of William S Rosecrans and Grant In Grant s Lieutenants From Cairo to Vicksburg edited by Steven E Woodworth Lawrence University Press of Kansas 2001 ISBN 0 7006 1127 4 Grant Ulysses S Personal Memoirs of U S Grant 2 vols Charles L Webster amp Company 1885 86 ISBN 0 914427 67 9 Hattaway Herman and Archer Jones How the North Won A Military History of the Civil War Urbana University of Illinois Press 1983 ISBN 0 252 00918 5 Korn Jerry and the Editors of Time Life Books The Fight for Chattanooga Chickamauga to Missionary Ridge Alexandria VA Time Life Books 1985 ISBN 0 8094 4816 5 Lamers William M The Edge of Glory A Biography of General William S Rosecrans U S A Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1961 ISBN 0 8071 2396 X McPherson James M Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era Oxford History of the United States New York Oxford University Press 1988 ISBN 0 19 503863 0 Meehan Thomas William and Sylvester Rosecrans In The Catholic Encyclopedia vol 13 New York Robert Appleton Company 1912 Reid Whitelaw Ohio in the War Her Statesmen Her Generals and Soldiers Vol 1 The History of the State during the War and the Lives of Her Generals Cincinnati OH Moore Wilstach and Baldwin 1868 OCLC 444862 Robertson William Glenn The Battle of Chickamauga Conshohocken PA Eastern National Press 1995 ISBN 978 0 915992 77 5 Robertson William Glenn The Chickamauga Campaign The Battle of Chickamauga Day 2 Blue amp Gray Magazine Summer 2008 Warner Ezra J Generals in Blue Lives of the Union Commanders Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1964 ISBN 0 8071 0822 7 Woodworth Steven E Six Armies in Tennessee The Chickamauga and Chattanooga Campaigns Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1998 ISBN 0 8032 9813 7 The Union Army A History of Military Affairs in the Loyal States 1861 65 Records of the Regiments in the Union Army Cyclopedia of Battles Memoirs of Commanders and Soldiers Vol 8 Wilmington NC Broadfoot Publishing 1997 First published 1908 by Federal Publishing Company Los Angeles County Public Library Who was William Starke Rosecrans and how was he involved in Gardena s founding William Starke Rosecrans biography at Civil War Home websiteFurther reading EditVarney Frank P General Grant and the Rewriting of History How the Destruction of General William S Rosecrans Influenced Our Understanding of the Civil War El Dorado Hills CA Savas Beatie 2013 ISBN 978 1 61121 118 4 Jones Evan C A Malignant Vindictiveness The Two Decade Rivalry Between Ulysses S Grant and William S Rosecrans in Jones Evan C Wiley Sword eds Gateway to the Confederacy New Perspectives on the Chickamauga and Chattanooga Campaigns 1862 1863 Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 2014 Moore David G William S Rosecrans and the Union Victory A Civil War Biography Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company Inc Publishers 2014 ISBN 9780786476244External links Edit Media related to William Starke Rosecrans at Wikimedia CommonsUnited States Congress William Rosecrans id R000440 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Retrieved on 2008 02 11 William S Rosecrans biography concentrates on the Tullahoma Campaign and the loss at Chickamauga General Rosecrans Department of The Ohio Headquarters Unit Photograph of the Rosecrans memorial in Sunbury Ohio William Rosecrans biography by the Civil War Trust Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Rosecrans William Starke Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Photograph of Major General Rosecrans and staff c 1863 from the Maine Memory Network ANC ExplorerMilitary officesPreceded byJohn Pope Commander of the Army of the MississippiJune 26 1862 October 24 1862 Succeeded byJohn Alexander McClernandPreceded byNone Commander of the Army of the CumberlandOctober 24 1862 October 19 1863 Succeeded byGeorge H ThomasU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byHorace Davis Member of the U S House of Representatives from California s 1st congressional district1881 1885 Succeeded byBarclay HenleyDiplomatic postsPreceded byMarcus Otterbourg United States Envoy to Mexico1868 1869 Succeeded byJohn W Foster Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Rosecrans amp oldid 1129281674, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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